Execution's Doorstep: True Stories of the Innocent and Near Damned

Page 292

Notes

271

(DPIC), www.deathpenaltyinfo.org, retrieved 26 July 2007; “Fact Sheet: Innocence,” National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NCADP), www.ncadp .org, retrieved 26 July 2007. 3. Sister Helen Prejean, The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful Executions (New York: Random House, 2004), 210. 4. “Cases of Innocence,” DPIC; Tim Junkin, Bloodsworth: The True Story of the First Death Row Inmate Exonerated by DNA (Chapel Hill, N.C.: Shannon Ravenel Books, 2004), 271–75; Ray Krone, interview by author, 13–14 June 2006. 5. Prejean, Death of Innocents, 252; “Cases of Innocence,” DPIC. 6. Samuel R. Gross, “Lost Lives: Miscarriages of Justice in Capital Cases,” 61 Law and Contemporary Problems 125 (Autumn 1998). 7. “Fact Sheet: Innocence,” NCADP. 8. Ibid. 9. Richard C. Dieter, “With Justice for Few: The Growing Crisis in Death Penalty Representation,” DPIC, October 1995. 10. “Fact Sheet: Innocence,” NCADP; Margo Hunter, “Improving the Jury System,” Public Law Research Institute, http://w3.uchastings.edu/plri/spr96tex/ juryuna.html, retrieved 26 July 2007; Prejean, Death of Innocents, 100–101. 11. James S. Liebman, Je=rey Fagan, and Valerie West, “A Broken System: Error Rates in Capital Cases, 1973–1995,” Columbia Law School, Public Law Research Paper no. 15, June 2000, http://www2.law.columbia.edu/instructionalservices/ liebman/. Richard Moran, “The Presence of Malice,” New York Times, 2 August 2007.

Appendix: States Paying Restitution for Wrongful Convictions in Capital Cases (pages 241–242) 1. Adele Bernhard, “When Justice Fails,” 6 U Ch L Sch Roundtable 73, 2005.


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